Please let the detracters of the C 17 be. They have made up their minds. Please don't confuse them with facts. The usefullness of the project is usless to them.
Unless you want to add to your post count. Oh honoured Oldie.


Sigh, could you please at least read what I have posted on this page before getting so hot and botheredNihat wrote:
So you 're saying that when the COAS says that "We have evaluated all available options and selected the C 17 as the best suited" ,
Ah the standard, "lets break the rules and preferred way because it does not make sense to me". No doubt Raja also thought he was doing the country a favor by quickly selling the spectrum "first come first serve", "get yours quickly"Also, last thing I would want is another MRCA or refueller type "compettition" whereby it'll be ages before we aquire a much needed capability.
Would love to see a convoy of bullock carts and one lalchix driving each one of them.Lalmohan wrote:same can be done by bullock cart also
with bale of hay on back, with lalchix reclining on them with blade of straw between teeth...
you know where I'm going with this one...
If it can be actually done by a bullock cart, bullock cart will get my vote.Lalmohan wrote:same can be done by bullock cart also
with bale of hay on back, with lalchix reclining on them with blade of straw between teeth...
you know where I'm going with this one...
Yes in a sense quite so.Pratyush wrote:There is not == between the 2 g and the C 17. If there is then even the P8 and the C 130 and the proposed javalin and the M 777 have to be questioned.
The answer is on these linesDont see you raising the issue on these proposed and completed deals. But it is only the C 17 is the one that is the object of your displeasure.
WAY TOO EXPENSIVE DUDE... That's MY money you are talking about you know.shiv wrote:C-17s are cheaper than 2G scam
Austin this is something I could never understand, I expected that EVEN those who will support this deal to use the above as a starting point of argument + what RohitVats said, "we need airlift, period"Austin wrote: The GOI bought the C-17 as thanks giving part of the deal , so lets be happy now
That is because you dont even understand "what is the requirement" (and no buying C 17 is not a requirement, it is a result)Pratyush wrote:Now it makes sense. In that i ask you again.What is the alternative. But it will restart the debate. So will not do so.
Thank god for small mercies.shiv wrote:C-17s are cheaper than 2G scam
LM nor can I. Its just a slow day in the office.Lalmohan wrote:pratyush
do a search on youtube for omid djallili and "belly dance"
i cannot do that from where i am otherwise I'd have provided it for you
[when faced with an impasse in his routine, omid reverts to "belly dance!" to divert attention]
SankuSanku wrote:That is because you dont even understand "what is the requirement" (and no buying C 17 is not a requirement, it is a result)
SNIP..........
Personally I think that you have not questioned the requirements at all.
First tell us what were the IAF requirements that led to the choice of the C-17. Have you seen these or are you just deducting what the requirements might have been based on the choice of aircraft they made ?Pratyush wrote:The 2g scam is a diffrent issue all together. Please do not mix the two.
Sanku, I have not seen you give me one example of an aircraft that can match the C 17. When you do we can carry on forward. Untill then this debate regarding the procedure and processs is meaningless.
Another thing. If the rule exists, exceptions are also made. FMS is an exception. If I am to follow you logic. Every FMS deal is liiegal (No multi vendors etc. )and ought to be questioned and scraped and multiple vendors be brought in. Never mind that the alternates dont exist.
And do you have arguments against requirement of C-17 in IAF service?Gilles wrote: First tell us what were the IAF requirements that led to the choice of the C-17. Has you seen these or are you just deducting the requirements based on the choice of aircraft they made ?
I do not know what the IAF requirements are. Unless the C-17 itself is a requirement.rohitvats wrote:And do you have arguments against requirement of C-17 in IAF service?Gilles wrote: First tell us what were the IAF requirements that led to the choice of the C-17. Has you seen these or are you just deducting the requirements based on the choice of aircraft they made ?
Than stop tilting at the windmills.Gilles wrote:I do not know what the IAF requirements are. Unless the C-17 itself is a requirement.rohitvats wrote:
And do you have arguments against requirement of C-17 in IAF service?
If one reads this thread from the beginning, the one single important information that is not available is this, the very reason why we have straw-man after straw-man.Gilles wrote: First tell us what were the IAF requirements that led to the choice of the C-17. Have you seen these or are you just deducting what the requirements might have been based on the choice of aircraft they made ?
In case you'd paid more attention, an attempt was made to answer this question using whatever public information is available in the first avatar of this thread.JimmyJ wrote:If one reads this thread from the beginning, the one single important information that is not available is this, the very reason why we have straw-man after straw-man.Gilles wrote: First tell us what were the IAF requirements that led to the choice of the C-17. Have you seen these or are you just deducting what the requirements might have been based on the choice of aircraft they made ?
I think this has been answered several times, but what the heck, once more wouldn't hurt. Where does it say that this aircraft is 'tailor made for the global super-heavyweight class'? Its got a much higher payload than the IL-76 but the range is not all that much higher. In addition the IAF's IL-76s fly to far off places like the US and UK every year, something the C-17 will be required to do as well.Philip wrote:Amit ,I have never said that the IL-76 is the "equal"of the C-17.The big Q I've been asking all along is when we do not have a global interventionist role like the US or its NATO allies,why do we need an aicraft that is tailor made for the global super-heavywieght class and as Giles has pointed out,even with C-17s,these nations continue to lease extensively the hated lousy Russian AN-124s and IL-76s!
How many transport aircraft larger than the IL-76 exist? How many were available to India in the 'last few decades'? And what makes you think that buying the C-17 means that concessions were made in the light and medium airlift department? Aren't we upgrading all An-32s? Isn't the number of C-130Js being bought is being predicted to go upto 20(a second order more or less being certain)? Aren't we inducting more Dhruvs, Mi-17s and 197 other choppers? Don't we have the LOH and MTA in development for just such areas? Isn't a major effort under way to upgrade all infrastructure in forward areas in Ladakh and the NE?As many have said,the Indian Railways are the best method of transportation of war material in the subcontinent and smaller medium sized aircraft like the AN-32s and heavylift/medium helos are more vital for suppling troops in the high Himalayas than C-17s.If we have NEVER leased a larger aircraft than Il-76s in the last few decades which we operate,then why are we going in for the C-17s?
A multi-vendor purchase inevitably takes place much slower than a single-vendor purchase. You haven't raised this point with regard to the rapid follow-on orders for the Su-30MKI, Mi-17 or for other single vendor purchases like the Tavor or C-130J. Why make an exception for the C-17?Even if it an absolute neccessity to possess such a capability,why hasn't the lease route been examined?Why is there this veil of secrecy about this acquisition which was never mentioned as critical in any JPC report or whatever! We are taking all the time in the world with artillery,jet trainers,submarines,etc.,but for an oversized transport aircraft for our immediate requirements,we are showing indecent haste.
Why did we operate 17 IL-76s then if we did not require any expeditionary capability? How is a fleet size of 10 C-17s vast while 17 IL-76s isn't?Nowhere in Indian foreign/defence policy has it also been articulated that India is going to acquire a vast expeditionary force that will intervene anywhere on the gobe.While we have entered in recent times with some IOR island and littoral nations security agreements,these envisage a greater role for the IN rather thsn the IAF.This is why the IN is drawing up an ambitious amphibious warfare capability,with several amphibious ships to protect our 1000+ isalands and IOR interests.All heavy eqpt. will be transported by sea.
Is the Chief of Air Staff also party to this insidious back-scratching?The answer as I've given time and time again is simple.This deal is an insidious "backscratch" by MMS for the N-deal,to save Boeing's goose/white elephant that flies.This fact is indisputable and so is the logistic string that comes with it.
The agreement says nothing about NATO C-17s being serviced in India. And the government has refused to sign the LSA, treating requests on a case-by-case basis instead.Will the GOI allow US/NATO C-17s embarked upon waging war in the region for example against Iran-our strategic antidote to Pak ,to obtain refeulling and repair and other support facilties from Indian bases?
Again I must ask, is the air chief party to this servile behaviour? After all it he who announced that the IAF is looking to purchase another six C-17s and that not signing the CISMOA doesn't not have any effect on US sourced aircraft operationally.Lastly,we are not buying the C-17 "off the shelf".Boeing themselves have stated that it will take 3-4 years to build a C-17.They want India to buy the lot asap,but we want it spread out,therefore we now want "16",a tailor made deal to suit Boeing's interests NOT India's!
PS:And if we don't sign on the dotted line,reg. the servile agreements that the US wants us to do for all def. deals,then the aircraft will come without key eqpt. as well.
Well I am glad we agree that you do not seek to understand this matter in any meaningful detail. Since we now understand each other there should be no issues, just that please dont make this into a virtue that all must abide by.Pratyush wrote:I would wish the IAF to have capability that dont use. Then need the capability they dont have. C 17 gives them that. Thats good enough for me.Sanku wrote:That is because you dont even understand "what is the requirement" (and no buying C 17 is not a requirement, it is a result)
SNIP..........
Personally I think that you have not questioned the requirements at all.
The requirement for C-17s appeared only after we signed the N-deal and if any intelligent person joins the dots will see that Boeing is desperate for new orders and India is obliging it
How do you know??It is not as if the IL-76s are in the same situation as the MIG-21s were at one time.
ah the mythical bird from non existent production lines??then extra IL-76s could easily be ordered as IL-476s are to be produced in the future.
highly possible but also dovetails with IAF needsi think its fairly apparent that the C17 deal is an offset for the N deal
Obviously, since the facts are so clear that only denial or diversion works.Pratyush wrote:Better still debate the feartures of our respective Lal chix.
Obviously, since the facts are so clear that only denial or diversion works.